Iranian president hails ballistic missiles as key to space program
An Iranian ballistic missile shot down over Israel in October 2024.
Iran's ballistic missile and space launch technologies serve a deterrent purpose, not an offensive one, President Masoud Pezeshkian said Sunday after visiting an exhibition showcasing the latest military advancements.
"We have worked to continuously strengthen our defense capabilities with the efforts of dedicated, innovative young scientists. This development will continue, and dear Iran will join the ranks of countries conducting extraterrestrial flights, showcasing our nation's scientific strength," Pezeshkian told officials and media.
Defense Minister General Aziz Nasirzadeh framed Iran’s ballistic missile program as an extension of its space launch efforts.
“Iran began its space activities by developing satellites. When challenges arose in satellite launches, the country shifted to building satellite carriers, a field in which it has now reached maturity. He added that there are promising plans, including the possibility of providing services to friendly nations,” the minister said.
Iran has launched a few satellites into low orbit, but its ballistic missile technology is viewed as a serious threat to regional countries and even most of Europe if its range extends beyond 2,000 kilometers. Last year, Iran launched two missile attacks on Israel, firing hundreds of medium-range ballistic missiles. While Israeli, American, and allied air defenses limited the damage, the attacks underscored Tehran’s ability to threaten regional countries with an estimated arsenal of 3,000 missiles.
President Pezeshkian also highlighted Iran’s space program as a driving force behind its missile development. "Our enemies constantly try to prevent us from standing on our own feet, but this has driven us to achieve scientific and technological advancements."
Iranian media have voiced concerns that President Donald Trump may push for limits on Iran’s ballistic missile program, as he did in 2018 when he withdrew from the JCPOA nuclear deal during his first term. Largely state-controlled and often reflecting official views, the media has repeatedly emphasized that Iran will not negotiate on any issue beyond its nuclear program.
Roozbeh Parsi, director of the Swedish Institute for International Affairs’ Middle East program, has denied any cooperation with the Iranian government following a media investigation linking him to a Tehran-directed influence network.
His response followed a report by Sweden’s TV4 and an article by Expressen, one of Sweden's most prominent dailies, which accused him of involvement in a network linked to Iran’s ministry of foreign affairs.
On Tuesday, TV4 reported that Parsi, the brother of former NIAC president Trita Parsi, had been connected to an Iranian initiative aimed at shaping Western policies.
The investigation, which cited emails provided by Iran International, followed a 2023 joint exposé by Iran International and Semafor that detailed Tehran’s efforts to cultivate relationships with academics and analysts abroad to expand its influence.
Sophie Löwenmark, a columnist for Expressen, wrote on Friday that “Parsi has participated in an advocacy network for a brutal dictatorship that today is a threat to Sweden, Swedish-Iranians, and Jews.”
She argued that his engagement had been secretive, without disclosure to his employers, and concluded that “this is not how someone you have full confidence in acts, but rather someone who appears to be the mouthpiece of the mullahs in Sweden.”
Parsi rejected her remarks in a response published by Expressen, saying that he had no financial ties to the Islamic Republic. He emphasized that his role as an academic allowed him to engage with different parties without political consequences.
“Unlike states, I do not represent any party and can therefore speak to everyone,” he wrote.
He also said that he participated in the Iran-led initiative on behalf of the British Foreign Office, not the Swedish Institute for International Affairs, arguing that TV4 and Löwenmark had omitted that detail.
“Certainly, Iran's aim with the initiative was to influence the West, but the participants' motives were something else entirely,” Parsi noted, adding that Western governments used such interactions to strengthen their positions in nuclear negotiations with Iran.
He dismissed criticisms from some Swedish-Iranians over his alleged ties to the Islamic Republic, saying, “My ‘crime’ is that I refuse to follow their lead and don't paint everything related to the Middle East and Iran in bright colors consistent with their ideologies.”
Sofie Löwenmark, Columnist at Expressen
Löwenmark responded in Expressen, challenging Parsi’s arguments. She argued that he acknowledged Iran’s intent to influence Western perspectives but failed to address leaked data showing that participants actively collaborated with Tehran’s interests through ghostwriting and other methods. She also noted his lack of transparency about how he joined the network or why he kept his participation hidden from colleagues.
“More importantly, he doesn’t seem to mind being part of a confidential circle convened by one of the world’s most brutal and repressive states,” she wrote. “It is inexplicable that he does not seem to realize the significance of the fact that the agenda of this secret network was not human rights, taxes, or welfare—but nuclear programs.”
Swedish MP says Parsi promoting Iran's interests
Swedish lawmaker Nima Gholam Ali Pour on Saturday accused Parsi of "promoting the interests of the Iranian regime", vowing to follow up his dismissal from taxpayer-funded the Swedish Institute for International Affairs at the Parliament as his employment is "completely unacceptable."
"If individuals like Rouzbeh Parsi—who sympathize with Sweden’s enemies—are to work at the Institute, why should the Swedish people fund such an organization? The Institute might as well reach out to the mullahs and ask for money," the Swedish MP of Iranian origin said in a post on his X account.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy on Saturday unveiled another underground missile base in the coastal areas of southern Iran, state TV reported.
"We are preparing ourselves to confront any enemy, at any scale, in any manner, and in any geography," said IRGC Navy Chief Alireza Tangsiri after unveiling the new underground missile city.
The missile bases are unveiled as a message to Iran's enemies, IRGC Chief Commander Hossein Salami said, calling on them to "make more precise calculations and to ensure they do not make mistakes that would put both themselves and others in trouble."
Should they make any mistake, "all these systems you see will be activated," he warned.
The IRGC also unveiled a new cruise missile, named Ghadr-380, which has "anti-jamming capabilities" and a range of more than 1,000 km (more than 600 miles), according to IRGC Navy Commander Alireza Tangsiri.
"Cruise missiles with the capability of countering enemy destroyers' electronic warfare are stationed in the IRGC's new underground missile city," the IRGC-affiliated Sabereen News reported.
"These missiles, with significant upgrades to their weapon systems and electronic warfare countermeasures, are ready for deployment in the shortest possible time," the report added.
This is the third underground missile base being unveiled by the Revolutionary Guard over the past month.
On January 18, the IRGC Navy unveiled an underground naval missile base at an undisclosed Persian Gulf location, two days before Trump's return to the White House.
The base is one of several built underground for vessels capable of launching long-range missiles and carry out distant warfare, IRGC Chief Commander Hossein Salami said after visiting the secret base during war games.
Footage released by IRGC-affiliated media and the state TV showed tunnels with long rows of "a new version of Taregh-class radar-evading speedboats which can launch cruise missiles."
Also on January 10, the IRGC's Aerospace Force unveiled what state TV called an underground missile city.
The base was used in the Iranian missile attacks against Israel in what the Islamic Republic codenamed operations True Promise 1 and 2 in April and October 2024, the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim said.
"The volcano lying under these mountains can erupt in the shortest time possible," state TV's report said.
Iran has been conducting multiple military exercises in the past few weeks, including air defense drills near nuclear sites like Natanz and a 110,000-strong Basij mobilization in Tehran, to showcase its capabilities and project a message of strength in the region, following consecutive defeats for its allies since September.
IRGC commander-in-chief Hossein Salami said earlier this month that the ongoing military exercises aim to make the enemies refine their assessments of Iran’s defense capabilities and demonstrate that the country’s deterrence is unaffected by external events, a tacit reference to the fall of Tehran’s longtime ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria.
India announced on Friday that three of its nationals who traveled to Tehran for business have gone missing.
The Indian Ministry of External Affair said it has formally requested assistance from the Islamic Republic to locate the missing individuals.
"Three Indian nationals who had gone to Iran for business purposes, they are missing. We are in touch with their families. We have taken up the matter with the Iranian Embassy in Delhi and with the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Tehran," Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said during a weekly briefing.
Jaiswal said the Indian Embassy in Tehran is in touch with local officials to make sure about the missing people's safety.
According to Indian media, 33-year-old Yogesh Panchal arrived in Tehran on December 5 but lost contact with his family two days later. Mohammad Sadeeque also traveled to Iran in December, while Sumeet Sud entered the country in January.
Past cases have seen Indian nationals detained in Iran, often as crew members aboard foreign vessels held in Iranian waters. Over the years, Iranian intelligence arrested many foreigners and kept them as de facto hostages, according to Amnesty International and other human rights groups.
Iran’s foreign ministry has yet to comment on the situation.
An Iranian cleric, an imam at an Islamic Center in suburban Stockholm, has been arrested for nearly two weeks and faces deportation from Sweden, Expressen reported Friday.
Almost two weeks ago, individuals in civilian clothing went to the home of cleric Mohsen Hakimollahi at midnight and took him away, a close associate told Expressen.
“He has been missing for more than ten days and we learned through various channels that he is in one of the Swedish Migration Board's detention centers and will soon be deported from the country,” added the source.
The Imam Ali Islamic Center, considered the largest Shiite institution in Northern Europe, has not issued a public statement on the matter.
Hakimollahi, aged 63, was transferred from Iran to Sweden to manage the Shiite center and had resided in the country for several years, developing connections with local political figures and religious organizations.
He was initially granted a temporary work permit in 2011, which was renewed three times prior to him obtaining permanent residency in 2017. However, that status has now been taken away.
"I can confirm that we are not conducting any preliminary criminal investigation connected to this individual," said Gabriel Wernstedt, spokesperson for Sweden’s Security Service (Säpo).
Wernstedt explained that Sweden's security police can apply special laws to counter security threats to the country. These laws allow authorities to detain non-citizens until their deportation. Such decisions are made based on various intelligence assessments.
In a separate development, the Swedish TV channel, TV4 Nyheterna, reported on Tuesday that Rouzbeh Parsi, of Iranian origin and the head of the Middle East program at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs (UI), communicated with authorities in Tehran who actively sought to amplify official Iranian foreign policy talking points in Western policy circles. Parsi later rejected the accusation. However, his brother, Trita Parsi in the US is known as a supporter of Tehran's foreign policy positions.
The detention of the cleric occurs after years of strained relations between Iran and Sweden, after 2019 when Sweden apprehended and sentenced Hamid Nouri, a former Iranian prosecutor for his involvement in the 1988 mass executions of political prisoners in Iran.
After serving five years of a life sentence, Nouri was swapped for a Swedish diplomat and an Iranian-Swedish national held in Iran on what human rights organization said were fabricated charges.
Another Iranian-Swedish individual, Ahmadreza Jalali, is still in custody in Iran facing a death sentence.
Hakimollahi’s phone has been inaccessible since his detention, and Expressen's attempts to contact his family for a statement have been unsuccessful.
Israel has accused Iran of funneling tens of millions of dollars to Hezbollah through clandestine cash deliveries, lodging formal complaints with the US-led committee overseeing the cease-fire in Lebanon, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.
Iranian envoys have been flying into Beirut from Tehran with suitcases stuffed with US dollars to finance Hezbollah’s operations. Additionally, Israel has reported that Turkish nationals have been used as couriers to transport funds from Istanbul to Beirut, according to WSJ.
The cease-fire committee, which includes representatives from Israel, Lebanon, the US, France, and the UN, has relayed these concerns to Lebanon’s government. The cease-fire terms require Lebanon to secure its borders to prevent arms smuggling but do not explicitly address cash transfers, WSJ reported, citing an unnamed US defense official.
These allegations come amid increased scrutiny of Iranian financial activities in Lebanon. In early January, tensions flared at Beirut Airport when an Iranian diplomat refused to have his bags searched, triggering a brief standoff. Lebanon’s Foreign Ministry later said that the funds in the diplomat’s possession were for embassy expenses and were allowed entry under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.
However, reports suggest this was the third such incident since November, raising concerns about Lebanon’s commitment to curbing Iranian cash and arms transfers to Hezbollah.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah’s Deputy Secretary-General Naim Qassem revealed in December that $50 million had been distributed to over 233,000 displaced Lebanese households, openly acknowledging Iranian financial support for the group.
Reports of cash transfers to Iran’s proxy groups have surfaced in the past. In 2006, Mahmoud al-Zahar, a senior Hamas official, said on Al-Alam TV that during a visit to Tehran, he received several suitcases containing $22 million from Qassem Soleimani, the late commander of the IRGC’s Quds Force.
In 2019, China’s Xinhua News Agency reported that during an event preceding "Quds Day" in Gaza, Iran distributed $651,000 to Palestinian families in the territory.